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  • A common modern mistake is the assumption that Jesus’ call to discipleship belonged to a distinctly Jewish phase—one later replaced by something simpler when the gospel crossed into the Gentile world. That is not what happened. The apostles did not dismantle Jesus’ yoke. They carried it forward—and taught Gentiles how to live under it without…

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  • When Jesus says, “Follow Me,” He is not issuing a general invitation to religious interest. He is issuing a summons. Modern Christianity often treats discipleship as an advanced or optional layer of faith—something for the especially serious, the especially committed, or the especially bored with surface-level belief. In the world of Jesus, that distinction would…

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  • And What His “Yoke” Actually Required Many believers today speak of following Jesus, while functionally living under the interpretive authority of pastors, traditions, or modern doctrinal systems. When Jesus said, “Follow Me,” He was not inviting people into a Bible study. He was recruiting apprentices. Modern Christianity often treats discipleship as information transfer—learning doctrines, attending classes, acquiring…

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  • We like to speak of the “Church Fathers” with a kind of scholarly distance—turning them into marble busts and Latin footnotes. But the earliest of them weren’t system-builders or philosophers. They were bridge-bearers: the generation that still smelled of the upper room, still prayed with the raw expectancy of Pentecost, still saw the Church as…

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  • Why our modern usage of a biblical word quietly distorts the gospel There are moments in church when the words being said are familiar, sincere, and yet… profoundly misleading. One of those words is “the lost.” It’s so common in modern Christian language that it rarely gets questioned. We speak of reaching the lost, saving the lost, praying for…

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  • Epiphany and Theophany

    What the Early Church Was Actually Celebrating — and Why It Matters For most modern Christians, Epiphany barely registers. If it is noticed at all, it is usually treated as a brief coda to Christmas—associated with the Magi, a star, or the quiet dismantling of decorations. It feels optional, symbolic, and disconnected from discipleship. That…

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  • Matthew 7 — The Weight of Response Matthew 7 does not introduce new material. It gathers everything that has already been said—and presses for a verdict. If Matthew 5 revealed the righteousness of the Kingdom. and Matthew 6 exposed the allegiance that sustains it, Matthew 7 confronts the hearer with a single question: What will…

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  • There are two ways people read the Bible today. One begins with the text. The other ends with the text. Only one of them deserves to be taken seriously. The Prima Facie Reading (At First Glance) A prima facie reading asks a simple question: “What does this appear to say on the surface?” That’s not wrong. It’s…

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  • Matthew 6:19–34 — Allegiance Revealed If Matthew 6:1–18 exposed righteousness performed for the wrong audience, Matthew 6:19–34 exposes allegiance divided between the wrong masters. Jesus now presses the question beneath giving, prayer, and fasting: What do you live for—and what do you trust to hold your life together? Treasure That Tells the Truth (6:19–21) “Do…

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  • Matthew 6:1–18 — Faithfulness Seen by the Father If Matthew 5 relocates the Law to the heart, Matthew 6 relocates righteousness out of public performance. Jesus does not introduce new commands here. He exposes a deeper problem: who righteousness is being performed for. “Beware of practicing your righteousness before men to be noticed by them…” (Matt…

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